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Archived CRA website
ARCHIVED - 5013-G - General Guide for Non-Residents - 2006 - Electing under section 216.1
Generally, the non-resident withholding tax is considered your final tax liability on the income. ... If you send us your return after the due date, your election will not be considered valid. The 23% non-resident withholding tax will be considered the final tax liability. ...
Archived CRA website
ARCHIVED - 5013-G - General Income Tax and Benefit Guide for Non-Residents and Deemed Residents of Canada - 2005 - Electing under section 216.1
Generally, the non-resident withholding tax is considered your final tax liability on the income. ... If you send us your return after the due date, your election will not be considered valid. The 23% non-resident withholding tax will be considered the final tax liability. ...
Archived CRA website
ARCHIVED - Electing under section 216.1
Generally, the non-resident withholding tax is considered your final tax liability on the income. ... If you send us your return after the due date, your election will not be considered valid. The 23% non-resident withholding tax will be considered the final tax liability. ...
Archived CRA website
ARCHIVED - Electing under section 216.1
Generally, the non-resident withholding tax is considered your final tax liability on the income. ... If you send us your return after the due date, your election will not be considered valid. The 23% non-resident withholding tax will be considered the final tax liability. ...
Archived CRA website
ARCHIVED - Electing under section 216.1
Generally, the non-resident withholding tax is considered your final tax liability on the income. ... If you send us your return after the due date, your election will not be considered valid. The 23% non-resident withholding tax will be considered the final tax liability. ...
Archived CRA website
ARCHIVED - Electing under section 216.1
Generally, the non-resident withholding tax is considered your final tax liability on the income. ... If you send us your return after the due date, your election will not be considered valid. The 23% non-resident withholding tax will be considered the final tax liability. ...
Archived CRA website
ARCHIVED - Corporations - Involuntary Dissolutions
Where a corporation has been dissolved and it is reasonable to expect that it will never be restored, the shareholders will be considered to have disposed of their shares when the corporation was dissolved. ... If property is distributed to a shareholder pursuant to the applicable Escheats Act, the shares of the corporation will be considered to have been disposed of at that time. 9. ... Since shares of an involuntarily dissolved corporation are considered to have been cancelled by the corporation, subsection 84(9) would apply. ...
Archived CRA website
ARCHIVED - Corporations - Involuntary Dissolutions
Where a corporation has been dissolved and it is reasonable to expect that it will never be restored, the shareholders will be considered to have disposed of their shares when the corporation was dissolved. ... If property is distributed to a shareholder pursuant to the applicable Escheats Act, the shares of the corporation will be considered to have been disposed of at that time. 9. ... Since shares of an involuntarily dissolved corporation are considered to have been cancelled by the corporation, subsection 84(9) would apply. ...
Archived CRA website
ARCHIVED - Get a T1 income tax package for 2021
You lived outside of Canada on December 31, 2021, but kept residential ties with Canada Factual resident You may be considered a factual resident of Canada and if so use: Income tax package for the province or territory where you kept residential ties Form T1248 Schedule D, Information About Your Residency Status or Deemed resident You may be considered a deemed resident of Canada and if so use: Income tax and benefit package for non-residents and deemed residents of Canada This may also apply to your spouse or common-law partner, dependant children, and other family members. You stayed in Canada for 183 days or more in 2021 and do not have significant residential ties with Canada You may be considered a deemed resident of Canada if you: do not have significant residential ties with Canada are not considered a resident of another country under a tax treaty between Canada and that country Use the Income tax and benefit package for non-residents and deemed residents of Canada. You do not have significant residential ties and lived in Canada throughout 2021 If you are not a factual resident of Canada, or a deemed resident of Canada, you may be considered a non-resident of Canada for tax purposes. ...
Archived CRA website
ARCHIVED - Get a T1 income tax package for 2022
You lived outside of Canada on December 31, 2022, but kept residential ties with Canada Factual resident You may be considered a factual resident of Canada and if so use: Income tax package for the province or territory where you kept residential ties Form T1248 Schedule D, Information About Your Residency Status or Deemed resident You may be considered a deemed resident of Canada and if so use: Income tax package for non-residents and deemed residents of Canada This may also apply to your spouse or common-law partner, dependant children, and other family members. You stayed in Canada for 183 days or more in 2022 and do not have significant residential ties with Canada You may be considered a deemed resident of Canada if you: do not have significant residential ties with Canada are not considered a resident of another country under a tax treaty between Canada and that country Use the Income tax package for non-residents and deemed residents of Canada. You do not have significant residential ties and lived in Canada throughout 2022 If you are not a factual resident of Canada, or a deemed resident of Canada, you may be considered a non-resident of Canada for tax purposes. ...